Publication Date:
2018-03-01
Description:
The Amundsen Sea Low (ASL) plays a major role in modulating the climate and environment of Antarctica and is of global importance in the Earth system. Unfortunately, a relative dearth of observational data across the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Seas prior to the satellite era (post-1979) limits our understanding of past behaviour and impact of the ASL. The limited proxy evidence for changes in the ASL are primarily limited to the Antarctic where ice core evidence suggests a deepening of the atmospheric pressure system during the late Holocene. However, no data has previously been reported from the northern side of the ASL. Here we report a high-resolution, multi-proxy study of a 5000 year-long peat record from the Falkland Islands (South Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean), an area sensitive to contemporary ASL dynamics. In combination with climate reanalysis, we find a marked period of wetter, colder conditions most likely the result of enhanced southerly airflow between 5000 and 2500 years ago, and inconsistent with synoptic conditions associated with the ASL today. After 2500 years ago, drier and warmer conditions were established, implying more westerly airflow and the increased projection of the ASL onto the South Atlantic. Our results are in agreement with Antarctic ice core records and suggest the Falkland Islands provide a valuable location for reconstructing atmospheric circulation changes across a large sector of the Southern Ocean on multi-decadal to millennial timescales. The possible role of tropical Pacific in establishing contemporary-like synoptic circulation is explored.
Print ISSN:
1814-9340
Electronic ISSN:
1814-9359
Topics:
Geosciences